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Wikipedia

Coopers Brewery

Coopers Brewery Limited, the largest Australian-owned brewery,[2] is based in the Adelaide suburb of Regency Park. Coopers is known for making a variety of beers, the most famous of which are its Pale Ale and Sparkling Ale. In the twelve months to 30 June 2020 total beer sales, excluding non-alcoholic beverages, rose to 79.8 million litres, an increase of 3.9% from the previous year.[3] It is also the world's largest producer of homebrewing beer concentrate in cans. Cooper's also manufactures DIY kits, reusable plastic bottles and boxed brew enhancers. Its shares are primarily owned by the extended Cooper family, and the company's constitution and classes of shares makes it difficult to sell shares outside the family.

Coopers Brewery Limited
Company typeUnlisted public
IndustryAlcoholic beverage
Founded1862; 162 years ago (1862)[1]
FounderThomas Cooper
Headquarters,
ProductsBeer, homebrew
OwnerThe Cooper Family
Websitewww.coopers.com.au
Coopers Pale Ale
Coopers Sparkling Ale bottle (stubbie) 5.8% ABV

History edit

1862 – Norwood edit

The brewery was established by Thomas Cooper in 1862 at his home in the Adelaide suburb of Norwood.[1] He brewed his first recorded batch on 13 May 1862.

1881 – Leabrook edit

In 1881 the brewery relocated to larger, commercial facilities at Leabrook.

1897 – Partnership edit

Thomas died in 1897. In his will, after bequests to his wife, daughters and youngest sons, he left all his property to his four eldest surviving sons, John, Christopher, Samuel and Stanley, under instructions to "carry on my business as Brewers under the form of 'Thomas Cooper & Sons' as partners".[4]

1923 – Incorporation edit

Each time one of the partners retired or died, a new partnership agreement needed to be drawn up. This became unwieldy, so in 1923, the partners decided to incorporate with limited liability. An agreement was drawn up where the capital of the company was declared as £39,000, and 39,000 £1 shares were distributed. 15,953 of the shares were designated as class "A", and 15,953 as class "B". Directors were to be appointed equally by holders of "A" and "B" shares.[5]

Changes of the 1960s edit

The company went through the doldrums during the recession of the late 1880s, a boom time in the 1920s, the doldrums during the Great Depression, and mixed fortunes through World War II and the 1950s. By the 1960s, the brewery was still producing much the same products as in the 1880s, but the brewing environment, and consumer demand, had changed.

1962 – SA Brewing share swap edit

There had been much consolidation of breweries in South Australia since Coopers was established, and the South Australian Brewing Company and Coopers & Sons were the only breweries remaining in Adelaide. As both were attractive takeover targets, in 1962 (after 100 years of Cooper family sole ownership), the two companies decided to do a mutually beneficial share swap in order to reduce the risk of takeover. The traditional South Australian market leader had been the South Australian Brewing Company. The share swap gave SA Brewing a 25% interest in Coopers ("C" and "D" class shares), and Coopers received 291,404 SA Brewing shares (2.65%). The Coopers board of directors was increased from four to five, with SA Brewing's "D" shares having the right to elect the fifth director.[6] After consulting the SA Brewing board and receiving their support, Coopers sold their SA Brewing shares in 1984, (at a substantial profit). SA Brewing continued to hold their 25% interest in Coopers.[7]

1968 – Gold Crown Lager edit

In the early 1960s, demand for Coopers Ales was flat, had been for years in the past, and looked like it would be for years into the future. The company strongly considered adding a Lager to their range. The older members of the board were highly resistant to such change, and, as this would be in competition with SA Brewing, the new board member was also resistant. It was not until 1967 that the board voted to go ahead with the new plant, with the SA Brewing representative not voting. After 105 years of only brewing ale and stout, "Gold Crown", Coopers first Lager, was available for sale in 1968.[citation needed]

1970 – Profitability edit

In 1970, the retail price of a bottle of Coopers ale was 41 cents:[8]

  • 11.82 cents (28.8%) was brewery costs
  • 19.55 cents (47.7%) was excise and taxes
  • 8.75 cents (21.34%) went to the retailer
  • 0.88 cents (2.16%) was the brewery profit.

1987 – 125th anniversary edit

To celebrate the 125th anniversary, the board commissioned Adelaide historian Alison Painter,[9][10] (wife of John Painter, an engineer employed by Coopers in 1968 to oversee the upgrading of the brewery plant and the reduction in plant maintenance costs),[11] to write "Jolly Good Ale and Old : The history of the Coopers Brewery 1862–1987".[12]

1993–1995 Lion Nathan takeover of SA Brewing and Coopers' reclamation of family ownership edit

SA Brewing Holdings subsequently diversified into manufacturing and wine, and then refocused to form Southcorp, Southcorp Wines, and SA Brewing. SA Brewing was acquired by trans-Tasman Lion Nathan in 1993. After two years of negotiations, in 1995 family members purchased all of the "D" class shares (with their right to elect a director), and some of the "C" class shares, and Coopers Brewery Ltd purchased the remainder of the "C" class shares.[13]

Thus, SA Brewing had a seat on the Cooper's board of Directors from 1962 to 1995, but in 1995 the Cooper family once again became sole owners of the company.[12]

2001 – Regency Park edit

Coopers Brewery
CountryAustralia
LocationRegency Park, South Australia
StatusOperational
Commission dateMarch 2003
Construction costA$7 million (2003)[14]
Owner(s)Coopers Brewery
Operator(s)AGL Energy
Thermal power station
Primary fuelNatural gas
Turbine technologygas turbine
Cogeneration?Yes
Power generation
Make and modelSolar Centaur 50S[15]
Nameplate capacity4.4 MW
External links
Websitewww.coopers.com.au

In 2001, the brewery relocated to much larger premises at Regency Park.[16]

Since 2003, the Regency Park brewery has used a gas turbine based cogeneration plant to supply steam and electric power requirements. Fired with natural gas with a thermal efficiency of 80%, the $6.2 million plant produces power with a 90% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions compared to a separate electricity generation and steam production plant. The plant is operated by AGL Energy and is rated at 4.4 MW. Generation above the brewery's electrical load of 1.2 MW is fed back into the grid.[17]

2005 – Lion Nathan takeover bid edit

In late 2005, Lion Nathan made an unsolicited takeover bid for Coopers, which was strongly opposed by the board and by the Cooper family. It was ultimately rejected at an Extraordinary General Meeting when the holders of 93.4% of the shares voted in favour of permanently removing the 3rd tier purchasing rights of Lion Nathan, effectively preventing any current or future takeover bid.[18][19][20][21]

Prince Alfred College held 70,000 shares (5%) in Coopers Brewery, which had been received in a bequest. At the time of the unsolicited takeover bid by Lion Nathan, these shares were valued at between $18 million and $22 million and considered to be a possible blocking stake.[22]

Liquidity of shares edit

Due to various restrictions imposed by the company's constitution, the selling of Coopers' shares is a tedious and complicated exercise. The constitution restricts and defines who can buy shares. Shares may not be owned by competitors, there are "Tiers" of rights to buy shares, and the constitution also imposes other terms and conditions. A further complication is that although all shares have the same voting rights on the floor of a general meeting, the four classes of shares have different rights to nominate directors.

The process of selling involves several steps:

  • A seller declares to the board that they wish to sell x shares of class y
  • The first tier rights of purchase are to existing shareholders. If there are no first tier buyers,
  • The second tier rights of purchase are to the Coopers employees superannuation fund.
  • From 1962 to 1995, the third tier rights of purchase were to SA Brewing.
  • From 1995 to 2005, the third tier rights of purchase were to Lion Nathan.
  • (At an Extraordinary General Meeting in 2005, the third tier rights were removed from the constitution.)
  • The price of the shares is determined by an independent valuation. (i.e. NOT by negotiation between seller and buyer.)

A significant issue of the takeover bid was that the offer was five times the last price determined by an independent valuation.

As a result of the Lion Nathan saga, the company has improved the liquidity of shares by offering regular buy-backs.

Prior to the takeover offer, there were 117 shareholders of 1,353,358 shares.

By the end of 2010, the number of shares on issue had reduced by about 20% to 1.15 million, held by 129 shareholders.[23]

2011 – Largest Australian-owned brewery edit

With Lion Nathan wholly owned by Kirin Brewing Company since 2009, and Fosters owned by SABMiller since 2011, Coopers is the only wholly Australian-owned major brewery.[2]

2012 – 150th anniversary edit

Coopers released a limited-edition "Celebration Ale" to celebrate the 150th anniversary, as well as celebratory labels on their other beers.

2017 – Bible Society / same-sex marriage issue edit

On 9 March 2017 Coopers Brewery launched a limited edition premium beer (in both can and carton) to commemorate the bicentenary of the Bible Society.[24][25] Public outcry arose over the use of the Coopers Brewery branded beer in a video[26] of the Bible Society debate over the issue of same-sex marriage.[27][28][29] Coopers Brewery issued two statements on 12 March 2017 in response to the backlash[30][31] and also posted a tweet saying they were not trying to push a religious message.[32] Various venues in Melbourne and Sydney subsequently announced they would no longer be stocking Coopers beers.[33][34] On 14 March Coopers issued a further statement[35][36] and accompanying video[37] declaring they were cancelling the release of the Bible Society commemorative cans and joining Australian Marriage Equality. On 15 March the Bible Society replaced the original video of the debate between Federal MPs Tim Wilson and Andrew Hastie with a four-second clip advising "We have decided to remove this video. Thank you for your understanding."

Beers edit

 
Beers at the Earl
 
Part of Regency Pk brewery

Coopers beers are widely available on tap in South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales, and in some bars in the rest of Australia as speciality beers. They are widely available in bottles and (to a lesser extent) cans around Australia and New Zealand, and occasionally at specialist importers in other countries. The distribution of the beers outside of South Australia has been largely promoted since 2003 by the subsidiary Premium Beverages Pty Ltd.

Coopers bottled beers are characterised by their secondary fermentation technique – some yeast remains in the bottle after bottling – thus the bottled beer contains some sediment. There are three schools of thought with regard to the sediment – some drinkers like to mix the sediment throughout the beer by tipping or rolling the beer before drinking, while others prefer to decant the beer into a glass leaving (most of) the sediment at the base of the bottle. Coopers have made such choice a strong element in their marketing strategy. Some find that mixing the sediment results in a shaken beer and prefer not to mix the sediment at all, simply opening the bottle and drinking. The action of drinking from the bottle serves to distribute the sediment anyway without shaking one's beer up.

Coopers also produce a large range of homebrew kits. Among these are, English Bitter, Dark Ale, Real Ale and Lager, as well as several others. Coopers homebrew kits provide the starting place for many new homebrewers across the world and are a highly successful brand.

Current Coopers Beers [38][39]
Beer ABV Available Label colour Details
Tap Bottle Can
Australian lager 4.2% Y Y Y Turquoise An Australian lager.
Sparkling Ale 5.8% Y Y Y Red An English style golden ale. It has a distinctive cloudy appearance due to the sediment being left in the bottle. The Sparkling Ale has a slightly different flavour and higher alcoholic content than the Pale Ale.
Pale Ale 4.5% Y Y Y Green A pale ale.
Best Extra Stout 6.3% Y Y Yellow A stout.
Dark Ale 4.5% Y Y Brown A dark ale, which in other parts of the world is called a brown ale.
Mild Ale 3.5% Y Y Y Orange A Midstrength Ale. Coopers entry into the lager dominated mid-strength market.
Premium Light 2.9% Y Y Y Blue A low-alcohol beer by Australian standards. In Australia, any beer with less than 3% alcohol is called "light".
Pacific Pale Ale 4.2% Y Y Y Blue A blonde ale, labelled as Session Ale until 2020.
Extra Pale Ale (XPA) 5.2% Y Y Purple A more crispier, fruiter flavoured Pale Ale.
Hazy IPA 6.2% Y Y Pink Limited edition, seasonal IPA.
Ultra Light Birell 0.5% Y Y White A non-alcoholic lager style beer.
Dry 4.2% Y Y White A low-carb, fine filtered lager style beer.
 
Part of the Coopers range of beers: Clear, 62 Pilsner, Premium Lager, Mild Ale, Dr. Tim's Traditional Ale, Pale Ale, Sparkling Ale, Dark Ale, Best Extra Stout, Extra Strong Vintage Ale.
Previous Coopers Beers (discontinued, renamed, seasonal, limited edition, replaced)
Beer ABV Available Label Colour Details
From To
Light Dinner Ale Light Green A pre-cursor of Pale Ale.
Light Brew Sparkling Ale - Light Brown A pre-cursor of Pale Ale.
Scotch Ale - .
Broken Hill Real Ale - A bitter.
Family Secrets Amber Ale 5.2% A limited seasonal release red ale.
Brew-A 6.0% A limited seasonal release IPA.
Vintage Ale 7.5% 2019 2020 A limited seasonal release traditional Ale. Each release is year named
LC Light Ale - .
Special Old Stout 6.8% .
Heritage 5.2% .
Adelaide Bitter - .
Adelaide Lager - .
Black Crow 3.6% A mild ale.
Clear Ale - .
Premium Ale 4.9% .
Thomas Coopers Finest Export Ale 4.9% .
DB 4.4% For Diet Beer; a carbohydrate-modified beer.
Regency Light 2.9% .
Regency Draught 4.9% .
Big Barrel Lager - .
Gold Crown Lager - .
Premium Lager 4.8% Y Y Green A lager.
62 Pilsner 5.0% Y Y Black[40] A pilsner.
Clear 4.5% Y Y Gold A full strength low carbohydrate dry beer.
Extra Strong Vintage Ale 7.5% Y Y Cream An English strong ale, also known as real ale. Seasonal limited edition.
Dr. Tim's Traditional Ale 4.5% Green A pale ale naturally conditioned in an Aluminium Can. This was essentially Pale Ale rebranded to overcome any comments about differences in taste due to the can. Eventually the product was named consistently with bottle and keg Pale Ale.

The company also produces a range of malt extracts and concentrate for homebrewers.

Pale Ale edit

In the twenty-first century Pale Ale is Coopers' most heavily marketed, most recognised, and most successful beer.[citation needed] Although it has only been produced under this name since 1989, it did have a number of similar predecessors from which it can claim a pedigree, with names including "Light Brew Sparkling Ale" (brewed in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century before being discontinued due to poor sales), and "Light Dinner Ale" (brewed from the 1960s with some changes to the recipe). The beer occupies a unique place in the local market – it is seen as being somewhere between a 'craft beer' and the traditional mass-produced lagers.[citation needed]

Distribution edit

Coopers distributes Carlsberg, Kronenbourg, Mythos, and Sapporo in Australia.[41][42][43]

In 2022, it was announced that Coopers had been awarded the brewing rights to Miller Genuine Draft in Australia, which includes Miller Chill (Lime, and Blood Orange flavours). Distribution rights for the Miller range were awarded to Perth-based Good Drinks Australia. In addition the partnership secured the licensed brewing rights to Coors Light.[44]

The Cooper Family edit

To date, six generations of the family have been involved in the brewery.[45] In addition to those who served as partners and/or directors, many other family members have worked in the brewery.

Thomas married twice, leading to two branches of the family, known as the "A side" and "B side" of the family. This has led to the company having multiple classes of shares with different voting rights.[46]

Generations:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Thomas married Ann Laycock Brown (1827–1872) at Skipton in 1849, resulting in 11 children:
2 William (1850–1882) – 3 children – Worked in the brewery prior to illness and early death (aged 32). Pre-deceased Thomas, and hence was not mentioned in Thomas's will.[46]
3 "Will" (William John (1876–1966)) – Worked in the brewery, but was not mentioned in Thomas's will.[46]
A1: 2 John Thomas (1857–1935) – 9 children – Partner 1897–1923; Chairman 1923–1935
A1: 3 Francis Thomas (1885–1944) – 4 children – Director 1935–1938; Chairman 1938–1944
A1: 4 "Geoff" (Geoffrey Day Thomas (1912–?)) married Jessie McAndrew – 1 child – Director 1945–1969; Chairman 1969–1990[47]
A1: 5 Dr James McAndrew (1954-) – 2 children – Director since 1990[48]
3 John Cecil Gunner (1887–1951) – Worked in the brewery
A2: 3 Andrew Ashgar (1891–1960) – 3 children – Director 1935–1959
A2: 4 "Ken" (Kenneth Andrew (1916–?)) – 2 children – Director 1959–1988
A2: 5 Glenn Andrew (1950-) – 2 children – Director 1988–2002; Chairman since 2002
6 Rachel Ann (1980-) – First of the sixth generation employed by the brewery.[45]
7 Annabel May (2010-) – First born of the seventh generation.[49]
2 Christopher (1859–1910) – 7 children – Partner 1897–1910; Died before incorporation. None of his children worked in the brewery.[46]
C: 2 Samuel (1871–1921) – 4 children – Partner 1897–1921; Both he and his wife died in the few years before incorporation. At incorporation, their estate was allotted a substantial number of what are now called "C" class shares. None of their children worked in the brewery.[46]
Thomas married Sarah Louisa Perry (1842–1928) at Adelaide in 1874, resulting in 8 children:
B1: 2 Stanley Reasey (1875–1938) – 5 children – Partner 1897–1923; Director 1923–1935; Chairman 1935–1938
B1: 3 Thomas Edwards (1899–1974) – 2 children – Director 1935–1944; Chairman 1944–1969
4 "Bob" (Stanley Robert (1930–1956)) – Worked in the brewery. Died aged 26.
B1: 4 "Bill" (William Thomas (1932–?)) – 4 children – Director 1969–1977; Managing Director 1977-2002
B2: 5 "Dr Tim" (Timothy James (1956-)) – 3 children – Director 1997–2002; managing director since 2002
B1: 5 Melanie Ann (1961-) – Director since 2009 – First female member of the Cooper's board[45][50]
5 Matthew Simon (1963-) – Has worked in the brewery since the 1990s[46]
B2: 3 Raymond Stanley (1904–1987) – 2 children – Director 1938–1969
B2:1969–1995;
D:1995–2002[51][52]
4 "Max" (Maxwell (1928–2010) – 3 children – 8 grandchildren – Director 1969–1990; Chairman 1990-2002[53]
D: 5 Robyn (1958-) married Cameron Pearce
"Cam" has been a Director since 2002, and has worked in the brewery since 2010[54]
5 Nick (Nicholas Keith) (1960-) – 2 children – Worked in partially owned subsidiary Adelaide Malting Co 1987–1998 and in the brewery from 1998 to 1999[46][55]
3 Phyliss Mary (1910–?) – Worked in the brewery
2 Frederic (1878–1952) – never married – Spent all of his working life at the brewery.
2 Charles Edward (1881–1936) – 4 children – Worked in the brewery for many years.
2 Walter Astley (1882–1909) – Worked in the brewery for several years. Died aged 26.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Thomas Cooper edit

Thomas Cooper (17 December 1826 – 30 December 1897) was born in Carleton, North Yorkshire, the youngest of 12 children of Christopher and Sarah (née Booth). His parents died when he was young (Sarah in 1830 and Christopher in 1832), and he was raised by his sister Ann. Thomas was apprenticed to a shoe-maker, and by the late 1840s, six of the seven living children had moved to Skipton. John, a shuttlemaker, lived in Bradford; Jane and Mary married; Ann was a housekeeper; Elizabeth and Martha were domestic servants.[56]

In 1849 he married Ann Laycock Brown (1827–1872) in the Wesleyan Chapel in Skipton. Their first child, William (1850–1882), was born in 1850, and Sarah Ann (1851–1852) in 1851. In 1852, Thomas, the pregnant Ann, and their two children emigrated to South Australia, setting sail from Plymouth on the SS Omega on 29 May 1852. During the 86-day voyage, Sarah Ann was one of the six children who died, but their third child was born as they rounded the Cape of Good Hope, and was named Sarah Ann (1852–1854) in memory of her sister. The family arrived in Port Adelaide on 24 August 1852. Their first home was a rented two-room cottage near the Rising Sun Inn on Bridge Street in the then village of Kensington, about three miles east of the city.[57] In the ten years before he commenced brewing in Norwood, Thomas worked initially as a shoemaker, then as a mason, and then as a dairyman, while Ann bore four more children: Mary Ann (1855–1856); John Thomas (1857–1935); Christopher (1859–1910); and Annie Elizabeth (1861–1921). In 1856 he purchased land in George Street, Norwood, and using his new skills as a mason, built a house which he described to his brother as having "6 rooms & Cellar & Passage" and 12 ft ceilings "on acct of Sumr heat".[58] In the same letter, and many others, he urged his brother and family to join him in South Australia, but this never eventuated.[59]

On 13 May 1862, Thomas brewed his first recorded batch. He did all the work himself (purchasing, calling for orders, brewing, washing, filling, corking and wiring the bottles, delivering the finished product), possibly with the help of then 12-year-old son William, while continuing to attend the cows, run the dairy, and do the daily milk deliveries. Being unlicensed, in early June he sought "professional advice on the sale of beer" from a solicitor, which his ledger records as having cost 7s 6d. Towards the end of 1862 Thomas realised that to make a living as a brewer, he would need to increase his brewing capacity, so he mortgaged his property to Frederick Scarfe, the Mayor of Norwood, a butcher, and a customer of Thomas's ale, for £300, and built a new brewhouse. In January 1863 he sold his cows and the milk delivery run. Although with half-a-dozen breweries in Adelaide, there was a lot of competition, Thomas's ale was unique in that he used no sugar, "consequently, ours being pure, the Doctors recommend it to their patients".[60] Although one of the smaller South Australian brewers, Thomas gained a reputation for quality. By 1867 he had over 120 customers, some quite notable (e.g. Samuel Davenport, John Barton Hack, George Hawker, Dr Penfold and the Lord Bishop of Adelaide, but he did not supply public houses, "apparently because it was against his principles".[61]

Ann bore four more children before dying suddenly in 1872: Joseph Brown (1863–1888); Jane Amelia (1865–1943); Margaret Alice (1868–1869) and Samuel (1871–1921). She was survived by all five of her sons, and two of her six daughters.[46]

Thomas remarried in 1874, and Sarah Louisa Perry bore eight children: Stanley Reasey (1875–1938); Thomas Perry (1876–1876); Francis Scowby (1877–1878) Frederic (1878–1952); Edward Booth (1880–1881); Charles Edward (1881–1936); Lily Louise (1881–1893); and Walter Astley (1882–1909).[46]

When he died in 1897, Thomas was survived by his wife, and nine of his nineteen children – seven of his sons, and two of his daughters.[46]

Tim Cooper edit

Dr Tim Cooper AM[62] MBBS MD MSc MBA MRCP(UK), the brewery's Managing Director and Chief Brewer, is a fifth generation family member from the "B" side of the family. Tim entered the family business in 1990 after training as a medical doctor and surgeon. At the University of Adelaide, he was reprimanded by the Vice-Chancellor for his role in rigging the vote that secured the election of Nick Xenophon as editor of On Dit in 1976.[63] He gained qualifications in medicine (MBBS, Adelaide), (MD, Bristol)), before acquiring qualifications in brewing science (MSc, Birmingham) and business administration (MBA, Adelaide). Tim was responsible for, and was the driving force behind, the design and construction of the new brewery development at Regency Park. In 2004 the company introduced the (world's?[clarification needed]) first naturally conditioned beer in an aluminum can, Dr Tim's Traditional Ale, which was named after him.[64]

Glenn Cooper edit

Glenn Cooper AM,[65] is chairman of the company and a fifth-generation family member from the "A" side of the family. He is a third half-cousin of Tim. Glenn entered the business in 1990, having previously worked in IT and marketing roles for both Anderson Digital Equipment and his own Adelaide-based business. Glenn is credited with the highly successful marketing campaign which has increased the market share of Cooper's beers from well below, to well above, that of historical South Australian market leader "West End".[64]

Company structure edit

Cooper & Sons – 1862-1897 edit

Thomas started recording his brews in 1862, and by the late 1860s he was employing one man, and his teenage son William. After initial success and expansion, in the late 1860s Thomas had many problems with the quality of the brews, and the business did not fare well for the next decade. In 1870 he sold all his property to meet his debts, and moved to rented premises in High Street, Kensington. By 1877, Thomas had resolved many of the quality problems, and in 1878 sales were back up to the level of the good years of the 1860s. In 1878, second son John went to work in the brewery full-time.[66]

Although Thomas continued to refuse to sell to public houses, and the licensing laws required his minimum sale to be five gallons, his customer base continued to expand, and on 23 July 1881, the first ale was brewed at the much larger newly purchased and built premises in Statenborough Street, Leabrook. Although eldest son William died in 1882 (aged 32), by this time second and third sons Thomas and Christopher were working in the brewery, and fourth son Joseph joined them when he finished his schooling. Under John's influence and monitoring, there was greater uniformity of the materials used, and the quality of the products steadily improved. In 1882, production increased to 30,000 gallons, and in the mid-1880s, 48,000 gallons, with the brewery employing seven men. The South Australian economic depression of the 1880s and 1890s suppressed demand, and for the next 10 years, production was level at around 30,000 gallons per year. Thomas retired from general work in the early 1890s, with John running the business with Christopher. Joseph died in 1888 (aged 25). Fifth son Samuel and sixth son Stanley (the eldest of second wife Sarah's children) came to the brewery when they finished school, as did William's son, Will, and younger sons Frederic, Charles and Walter.[67]

Thos Cooper & Sons – Partnership – 1897–1923 edit

Thomas died on 30 December 1897. After bequests to his wife, daughters and youngest sons, his will left all of his property to his four eldest surviving sons, (John, Christopher, Samuel and Stanley), under instructions to "carry on my business as Brewers under the form of 'Thos Cooper & Sons' as partners". Younger sons Frederic, (who spent all of his working life at the brewery), and Charles, (who worked at the brewery for many years), received no interest in the business. Nor did grandson Will, who also worked at the brewery. Youngest son Walter was bequeathed an interest in the business when he reached age 25, but died of malaria aged 26.[68]

Cooper & Sons Ltd – 1923–1988 edit

Each time one of the partners retired or died, a new partnership agreement needed to be drawn up. This became unwieldy, so in 1923, the partners decided to incorporate with limited liability. An agreement was drawn up where the capital of the company was declared as £39,000, and the 39,000 £1 shares were distributed:

John Thomas Cooper 15,953 shares 41% "A"
Executors of Samuel's widow's estate
(on direction of J.T. Cooper)
7,092 shares 18% "C"[69]
Stanley Reasey Cooper 15,953 shares 41% "B"
Francis Thomas Cooper 1 share "C"[69]
Wilfred Frank Cooper 1 share "C"[69]

Directors were to be appointed equally by holders of "A" and "B" shares.[5]

In 1962, when the two remaining Adelaide brewers were fearing takeover, SA Brewing and Coopers did a share swap. This gave SA Brewing a 25% interest in Coopers ("C" and "D" class shares) and Coopers received 291,404 SA Brewing shares (2.65%). The Coopers board of directors was increased from four to five, with SA Brewing's "D" shares having the right to elect the fifth director. At the time, a total of 486,750 new shares were issued, being made up of 87,751 "D" class shares and the remainder, along with other unclassified shares, becoming "C" class shares.[6]

After discussions with, and receiving support from, SA Brewing, Coopers sold their SA Brewing shares in 1984, at a substantial profit.[7]

Directors edit

The directors of Cooper & Sons Ltd were:

Chairman Family board members Other board members seats Managing director
1923 J.T. Cooper (A) S.R. Cooper (B) 2
1935 S.R. Cooper (B) F.T. Cooper (A); T.E. Cooper (B); A.A. Cooper (A) 4
1938 F.T. Cooper (A) T.E. Cooper (B); A.A. Cooper (A); R.S. Cooper (B)
1944 T.E. Cooper (B) A.A. Cooper (A); R.S. Cooper (B); vacant (A)
1945 A.A. Cooper (A); R.S. Cooper (B); G.D.T. Cooper (A)
1959 R.S. Cooper (B); G.D.T. Cooper (A); K.A. Cooper (A) (Fifth seat created 1962)
1962 Sir Roland Jacobs (SA Brewing) (D)[70] 5
1967 Sir Norman Young (SA Brewing) (D)[71]
1969 Geoff Cooper (A) Ken Cooper (A); Max Cooper (B); Bill Cooper (B) Geoff Cooper
1977 Bill Cooper
1983 J.I.N. Winter (SA Brewing) (D)

Coopers Brewery Ltd – since 1988 edit

With Melanie joining the company in 1985, (and subsequently becoming Company Secretary, and a Director), the name "Cooper & Sons" was no longer appropriate. She lobbied for a change in the company's name, and was eventually successful.

SA Brewing was acquired by trans-Tasman Lion Nathan in 1993. After two years of negotiations, in 1995 Cooper family members purchased all of the "D" class shares (with their right to elect a director), and some of the "C" class shares, and Coopers Brewery Ltd purchased the remainder of the "C" class shares held by SA Brewing. In return the Coopers constitution was amended to give Lion Nathan "third tier" rights to buy Coopers shares.

This resulted in Max and Bill owning more than 50% of the "D" class shares. They agreed that Bill would sell Max his "D" class shares, and Max would sell Bill his "B" class shares, resulting in Max owning the majority of the "D"s, and Bill owning the majority of the "B"s.[13]

In 2005, Lion Nathan launched a hostile takeover of Coopers, offering to buy Coopers shares at five times the price at which they had last traded. Although the 1995 negotiations resulted in Lion Nathan owning no Coopers shares, the section of the Coopers constitution, (which stated the circumstances under which shares could be sold), appeared to give Lion Nathan the avenue to buy Coopers shares. The constitution stated three tiers of purchasing rights:

The shares must first be offered to an existing shareholder. ("first rights agreement");
If existing shareholders choose not to buy, the shares must then be offered to the Coopers Superannuation Fund. ("second rights agreement");
If the Fund chooses not to buy, the shares must then be offered to Lion Nathan. ("third rights agreement")

Lots of legal activity, injunctions, claims and counter-claims followed. Eventually the Coopers Board gained a ruling that allowed them to call an Extraordinary General Meeting to decide a motion which would remove the "third rights agreement" from the constitution. At the meeting, the holders of 93.4% of the shares voted to remove the "third rights agreement" from the constitution.[21]

At the time (November 2005), Coopers had 117 Shareholders, and 4 classes of shares.[52] The Coopers Constitution and the 2005 Buy-Back Offer stated:

(a) the holders of (the 15,553) A Class shares may elect two directors to the board of Coopers (A Class directors);
(b) the holders of (the 15,953) B Class shares may elect two directors to the board of Coopers (B Class directors);
(c) the holders of (the 1,234,761) C Class shares, with the holders of Classes A, B and D Class shares, may elect one director to the board of Coopers if that director is nominated by a unanimous resolution of all directors appointed by the holders of A, B and D shares (C Class director); and
(d) the holders of (the 87,091) D Class shares may elect one director to the board of Coopers (D Class director).

The total number of shares, of all classes, was 1,353,358. If the Buy-Back was fully subscribed, 203,003 shares would be cancelled, and the total number of shares would be reduced to 1,150,335.[72]

The Takeovers Panel stated that the directors' holdings were:[52]

  • Glenn and James (or interests closely associated with them) controlled 4,834 A Class shares or approximately 31% of the A Class shares
  • Bill, (or interests closely associated with him), controlled 9,456 B Class shares or approximately 59% of the B Class shares.
  • M. Cooper Nominees Pty. Ltd., a company associated with Max, controlled 49,271 D Class shares or approximately 57% of the D Class shares.
  • The other Coopers directors (or persons closely associated with them) owned 10,420 or approximately 11.7% of the D Class shares.
  • The Coopers directors' voting power was 28.2%.[73]

In the chairman's address to the 2006 AGM, Glenn noted that the costs incurred by Coopers in addressing the offer were $8 million.[74]

In 2009, Coopers Brewery Ltd appointed its first female director.

Directors edit

The directors of Coopers Brewery Ltd have been:

Chairman Family Board members Other board members Seats Managing
Director
A B D
1988 Geoff (A) *Glenn *Max & *Bill J.I.N. Winter
(SA Brewing) (D)
5 Bill
1990 *Max (B) *Glenn &
James
*Bill
1995 *Max (D)[75] *Bill &
N.C. Shierlaw[75]
(1995: Fifth seat
in family control)
C
1996 (Sixth seat 1996–2006)
D.R. Kingston
(Rothschild) (C)[76]
6
1997 *Bill & *Tim[75] D
2002 *Glenn (A) James Bill & *Tim Cameron Pearce[54] Tim
2007 (No external directors) 5
2009 *Tim &
*Melanie[75]
2010 *Cam Pearce
now
* = executive chairman/director

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Hampson, Tim (2008). The Beer Book. London: Dorling Kindersley. p. 10. ISBN 978-1405333016.
  2. ^ a b . Cooper's press releases. 22 September 2011. Archived from the original on 3 February 2014. pdf 25 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "[1]", Coopers Annual Report 2020
  4. ^ Painter (1998), p. 43
  5. ^ a b Painter (1998), p. 65
  6. ^ a b Painter (1998), p. 106
  7. ^ a b Painter (1998), p. 128
  8. ^ Painter (1998), p. 114
  9. ^ Alison Painter, Professional Historians Association (SA)
  10. ^ Alison Painter (1992) Adelaide Hotels and Temperance 1860–1930, Professional Historians Association (SA)
  11. ^ Painter (1998), pp. 114, 115, 117
  12. ^ a b Alison Painter (1987) Jolly Good Ale and Old : The History of Coopers Brewery 1862–1987, published to commemorate 125 years of brewing by the Cooper family in South Australia.
    Alison Painter (1998) Jolly Good Ale and Old : The History of Coopers Brewery 1862–1998 ISBN 0-9586067-0-6
    A further updated third edition is due to be published "soon" – 13 May 2012 is the 150th anniversary of Thomas's first recorded brew.
  13. ^ a b Painter (1998), p. 156
  14. ^ Evans, Simon (30 September 2016). "How Coopers brewery had power on tap when rest of SA blacked out". Australian Financial Review. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  15. ^ "Coopers Brewery Cogeneration Facility" (PDF). AGL Energy. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  16. ^ . SA Memory. samemory.sa.gov.au. Archived from the original on 24 February 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2010.
  17. ^ Government of Western Australia: Office of Energy. "Case Study: Coopers Brewery Cogeneration Project" (PDF). clean.energy.wa.gov.au. Retrieved 21 July 2010. [dead link]
  18. ^ "Coopers shareholders stymie Lion Nathan bid". The Age. theage.com.au. 14 December 2005. Retrieved 21 July 2010.
  19. ^ Trevor Chappell (2 September 2005). "Lion Nathan bids for Coopers". The Sydney Morning Herald. smh.com.au. Retrieved 21 July 2010.
  20. ^ John P.G. Lessing and Renaee Johns (July 2006). . ePublications@bond. epublications.bond.edu.au. Archived from the original on 21 July 2008. Retrieved 21 July 2010.
  21. ^ a b Verity Edwards (2005) Woman controls brewery's destiny, The Australian, 1 October 2005[dead link] (Copy available at homebrewandbeer.com)
  22. ^ Kohler, Alan (20 November 2005). "Use surplus to fund tax cuts. Now!". The Age. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  23. ^ Blair Speedy (2010) Coopers Brewery keeps a cool head on global suitors, The Australian, 28 December 2010
  24. ^ "Coopers launches Bible Society beer". Brews News. 9 March 2017. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
  25. ^ . Bible Society. 9 March 2017. Archived from the original on 13 March 2017. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
  26. ^ . Bible Society. 9 March 2017. Archived from the original on 14 March 2017. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  27. ^ . Bible Society. 9 March 2017. Archived from the original on 12 March 2017. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  28. ^ "Liberal MPs in marriage equality debate sponsored by Coopers beer, Bible Society". The Age. 11 March 2017. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  29. ^ "Beer and Bibles: brewery cops same-sex marriage backlash". Australian Broadcasting Corporation Triple J. 12 March 2017. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  30. ^ "Coopers Keeping It Light" (PDF). 12 March 2017. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  31. ^ "Commemorative Premium Lite" (PDF). 12 March 2017. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
  32. ^ @coopersbrewery (12 March 2017). "please know we aren't trying to push a religious message. See our full statement here" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  33. ^ "Music Venues Boycott Coopers Over Same-Sex Marriage Video". Music Feeds. 13 March 2017. Retrieved 13 March 2017.
  34. ^ "Pubs boycott Coopers beer following Bible Society marriage equality marketing campaign". The Sydney Morning Herald. 14 March 2017. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  35. ^ "COOPERS BREWERY SUPPORTS DIVERSITY AND EQUALITY". Coopers Brewery. 14 March 2017. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  36. ^ "Coopers Brewery supports diversity and equality" (PDF). Coopers Brewery. 14 March 2017. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  37. ^ Coopers Brewery supports diversity and equality. Coopers Brewery. 14 March 2017. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  38. ^ Coopers Brewery Pale Ale, Sparkling Ale, Premium Beers and Stouts 9 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ "Our Beer". Coopers Brewery. 22 February 2021. Retrieved 22 February 2021.
  40. ^ The 62 Pilsner label appears only on the neck of the bottle.
  41. ^ "Coopers claims Carlsberg crown from Foster's". The Australian. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  42. ^ Greenblat, Eli (19 July 2011). "Coopers to brew Sapporo beer for local markets". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  43. ^ "Mythos: Greece's biggest export beer hits Australian shores". Ausfoodnews.com.au. 5 August 2010. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  44. ^ Spence, Andrew (25 May 2022). "Coopers to brew major US beers in Adelaide".
  45. ^ a b c Coopers now operating for six generations, Australian Brews News, 17 November 2009
  46. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Painter (1998), inside front cover
  47. ^ GDT Cooper, MBE, 1 January 1941, itsanhonour.gov.au
    SX1435 Lieutenant Colonel Geoffrey Day Thomas Cooper, MBE, [2], [3], www.awm.gov.au; WWII Service 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
    Biographical cuttings on G.D.T. (Geoff) Cooper, catalogue.nla.gov.au
  48. ^ James McAndrew Cooper (1982) Host-bacteria relationships at the secretory surfaces of the lung, PhD Thesis, University of Adelaide
  49. ^ Brewery celebrates seventh generation Cooper[permanent dead link], 8 July 2010, Press release, www.coopers.com.au
  50. ^ Meredith Booth (2009) Melanie Cooper, the baroness of beer, The Advertiser, 21 October 2009
  51. ^ In 1995, Cooper family members purchased all of the "D" class shares from Lion Nathan. This resulted in Max and Bill owning more than 50% of the "D" class shares. They agreed that Bill would sell Max his "D" class shares, and Max would sell Bill his "B" class shares, resulting in Max owning the majority of the "D"s, (with the right to nominate the D Class director), and Bill owning the majority of the "B"s, (with the right to nominate the two B Class directors.
  52. ^ a b c ATP 22 (2005), Takeovers Panel, www.takeovers.gov.au
  53. ^ Meredith Booth (2010) Coopers Brewery ex-chairman Maxwell Cooper dies, The Advertiser, 1 December 2010
  54. ^ a b Cameron Pearce, the husband of one of Max's daughters, became a director on 31 January 2002 when Max retired from the board. REJECT the Lion Nathan Offer, p. 104.
    He subsequently joined the brewery as Director Business Development in September 2010, after nearly 10 years as CEO of Meals on Wheels (SA) Inc., and 21 years with the Shell Company of Australia Ltd. New appointments at Coopers[permanent dead link], 25 November 2010, Press release, www.coopers.com.au; Cam Pearce at Linkedin; (small photo[permanent dead link])
  55. ^ Painter (1998) pp.159&164
  56. ^ Painter (1998), pp. 1–3
  57. ^ Painter (1998), pp. 3–4
  58. ^ Letter from Thomas Cooper to his brother John, written in 1857.
  59. ^ Painter (1998), pp. 4–8
  60. ^ Letter from Thomas Cooper to his brother John, written in 1864.
  61. ^ Painter (1998), pp. 9–17
  62. ^ Timothy James Cooper, AM, 9 June 2008, Citation: For service to the brewing industry, particularly through the implementation of environmentally sustainable production and manufacturing practices, to professional organisations, and to the community.
  63. ^ "Subscribe to The Australian". Dsf.newscorpaustralia.com. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
  64. ^ a b . Cooper's website. Archived from the original on 8 January 2016. Retrieved 15 February 2012.
  65. ^ Glenn Andrew Cooper, AM, (Member of the Order of Australia), 13 June 2005, Citation: For service to the food and beverage industry, and to the community through support for cultural, charitable and sporting organisations.
    Centenary Medal, 1 January 2001, Citation: For long service to excellence in brewing.
  66. ^ Painter (1998), pp. 9–26
  67. ^ Painter (1998), pp. 27–42
  68. ^ Painter (1998), pp. 43–44
  69. ^ a b c Initially, these shares had no classification, but with the SA Brewing share swap of 1962, they were designated "C" class to distinguish them from the "D" class shares which had the right to nominate the "D" Class director. At that time and before, these shares had no rights to nominate a director (as subsequently described in the 2005 "takeover" documents).
  70. ^ Alison Painter (2007) 'Jacobs, Sir Roland Ellis (1891–1981)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 17, (MUP)
  71. ^ Norman Young (1991) Figuratively speaking : the reminiscences, experiences & observations of Sir Norman Young, catalogue.nla.gov.au
  72. ^ Buy-Back offer[permanent dead link], December 2005.
  73. ^ 2005 Buy-Back offer[permanent dead link], p. 18
  74. ^ Chairman's address[permanent dead link] to the Coopers AGM, 30 November 2006
  75. ^ a b c d After Max and Bill did their B Class & D Class share trade in 1995, Max controlled the election of the D Class director, and Bill controlled the election of the two B Class directors.
    To fill the second B class director position, Bill elected Norman Sheirlaw. Norman is a cousin of Bill's, and a long term friend. He had been a successful stockbroker, investor, and director of numerous companies. Painter (1998), p. 167; Mr. Poseidon was once a battler, The Age, 27 January 1970, p. 2
    Tim gained a seat on the board on 22 October 1997 when Norman Shierlaw resigned. Painter (1998), p. 167; REJECT the Lion Nathan Offer, p. 104
    One of Max's sons-in-law, Cameron Pearce, became the D class director when Max retired from the board in 2002.
    Melanie became a director when Bill retired from the board in 2009.
    Max died in November 2010; it is not clear who now controls the D Class shares.
  76. ^ Fleur Leyden (2007) Southern Cross hires its own, Herald Sun, 20 February 2007
    David Kingston's decision to step down as a Board member was announced in the Chairman's address[permanent dead link] at the AGM, 30 November 2006, thus returning the board to five directors.

Bibliography edit

  • Deutsher, Keith M. (2012). The Breweries of Australia (2nd ed.). Glebe, NSW: Beer & Brewer Media. ISBN 9780987395214.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Tim Cooper interview

34°52′21″S 138°34′23″E / 34.8726°S 138.5731°E / -34.8726; 138.5731

coopers, brewery, limited, largest, australian, owned, brewery, based, adelaide, suburb, regency, park, coopers, known, making, variety, beers, most, famous, which, pale, sparkling, twelve, months, june, 2020, total, beer, sales, excluding, alcoholic, beverage. Coopers Brewery Limited the largest Australian owned brewery 2 is based in the Adelaide suburb of Regency Park Coopers is known for making a variety of beers the most famous of which are its Pale Ale and Sparkling Ale In the twelve months to 30 June 2020 total beer sales excluding non alcoholic beverages rose to 79 8 million litres an increase of 3 9 from the previous year 3 It is also the world s largest producer of homebrewing beer concentrate in cans Cooper s also manufactures DIY kits reusable plastic bottles and boxed brew enhancers Its shares are primarily owned by the extended Cooper family and the company s constitution and classes of shares makes it difficult to sell shares outside the family Coopers Brewery LimitedCompany typeUnlisted publicIndustryAlcoholic beverageFounded1862 162 years ago 1862 1 FounderThomas CooperHeadquartersAdelaide South AustraliaProductsBeer homebrewOwnerThe Cooper FamilyWebsitewww wbr coopers wbr com wbr au Coopers Pale Ale Coopers Sparkling Ale bottle stubbie 5 8 ABV Contents 1 History 1 1 1862 Norwood 1 2 1881 Leabrook 1 3 1897 Partnership 1 4 1923 Incorporation 1 5 Changes of the 1960s 1 5 1 1962 SA Brewing share swap 1 5 2 1968 Gold Crown Lager 1 6 1970 Profitability 1 7 1987 125th anniversary 1 8 1993 1995 Lion Nathan takeover of SA Brewing and Coopers reclamation of family ownership 1 9 2001 Regency Park 1 10 2005 Lion Nathan takeover bid 1 10 1 Liquidity of shares 1 11 2011 Largest Australian owned brewery 1 12 2012 150th anniversary 1 13 2017 Bible Society same sex marriage issue 2 Beers 2 1 Pale Ale 2 2 Distribution 3 The Cooper Family 3 1 Thomas Cooper 3 2 Tim Cooper 3 3 Glenn Cooper 4 Company structure 4 1 Cooper amp Sons 1862 1897 4 2 Thos Cooper amp Sons Partnership 1897 1923 4 3 Cooper amp Sons Ltd 1923 1988 4 3 1 Directors 4 4 Coopers Brewery Ltd since 1988 4 4 1 Directors 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory edit1862 Norwood edit The brewery was established by Thomas Cooper in 1862 at his home in the Adelaide suburb of Norwood 1 He brewed his first recorded batch on 13 May 1862 1881 Leabrook edit In 1881 the brewery relocated to larger commercial facilities at Leabrook 1897 Partnership edit Thomas died in 1897 In his will after bequests to his wife daughters and youngest sons he left all his property to his four eldest surviving sons John Christopher Samuel and Stanley under instructions to carry on my business as Brewers under the form of Thomas Cooper amp Sons as partners 4 1923 Incorporation edit Each time one of the partners retired or died a new partnership agreement needed to be drawn up This became unwieldy so in 1923 the partners decided to incorporate with limited liability An agreement was drawn up where the capital of the company was declared as 39 000 and 39 000 1 shares were distributed 15 953 of the shares were designated as class A and 15 953 as class B Directors were to be appointed equally by holders of A and B shares 5 Changes of the 1960s edit The company went through the doldrums during the recession of the late 1880s a boom time in the 1920s the doldrums during the Great Depression and mixed fortunes through World War II and the 1950s By the 1960s the brewery was still producing much the same products as in the 1880s but the brewing environment and consumer demand had changed 1962 SA Brewing share swap edit There had been much consolidation of breweries in South Australia since Coopers was established and the South Australian Brewing Company and Coopers amp Sons were the only breweries remaining in Adelaide As both were attractive takeover targets in 1962 after 100 years of Cooper family sole ownership the two companies decided to do a mutually beneficial share swap in order to reduce the risk of takeover The traditional South Australian market leader had been the South Australian Brewing Company The share swap gave SA Brewing a 25 interest in Coopers C and D class shares and Coopers received 291 404 SA Brewing shares 2 65 The Coopers board of directors was increased from four to five with SA Brewing s D shares having the right to elect the fifth director 6 After consulting the SA Brewing board and receiving their support Coopers sold their SA Brewing shares in 1984 at a substantial profit SA Brewing continued to hold their 25 interest in Coopers 7 1968 Gold Crown Lager edit In the early 1960s demand for Coopers Ales was flat had been for years in the past and looked like it would be for years into the future The company strongly considered adding a Lager to their range The older members of the board were highly resistant to such change and as this would be in competition with SA Brewing the new board member was also resistant It was not until 1967 that the board voted to go ahead with the new plant with the SA Brewing representative not voting After 105 years of only brewing ale and stout Gold Crown Coopers first Lager was available for sale in 1968 citation needed 1970 Profitability edit In 1970 the retail price of a bottle of Coopers ale was 41 cents 8 11 82 cents 28 8 was brewery costs 19 55 cents 47 7 was excise and taxes 8 75 cents 21 34 went to the retailer 0 88 cents 2 16 was the brewery profit 1987 125th anniversary edit To celebrate the 125th anniversary the board commissioned Adelaide historian Alison Painter 9 10 wife of John Painter an engineer employed by Coopers in 1968 to oversee the upgrading of the brewery plant and the reduction in plant maintenance costs 11 to write Jolly Good Ale and Old The history of the Coopers Brewery 1862 1987 12 1993 1995 Lion Nathan takeover of SA Brewing and Coopers reclamation of family ownership edit SA Brewing Holdings subsequently diversified into manufacturing and wine and then refocused to form Southcorp Southcorp Wines and SA Brewing SA Brewing was acquired by trans Tasman Lion Nathan in 1993 After two years of negotiations in 1995 family members purchased all of the D class shares with their right to elect a director and some of the C class shares and Coopers Brewery Ltd purchased the remainder of the C class shares 13 Thus SA Brewing had a seat on the Cooper s board of Directors from 1962 to 1995 but in 1995 the Cooper family once again became sole owners of the company 12 2001 Regency Park edit Coopers BreweryCountryAustraliaLocationRegency Park South AustraliaStatusOperationalCommission dateMarch 2003Construction costA 7 million 2003 14 Owner s Coopers BreweryOperator s AGL EnergyThermal power stationPrimary fuelNatural gasTurbine technologygas turbineCogeneration YesPower generationMake and modelSolar Centaur 50S 15 Nameplate capacity4 4 MWExternal linksWebsitewww wbr coopers wbr com wbr au edit on Wikidata In 2001 the brewery relocated to much larger premises at Regency Park 16 Since 2003 the Regency Park brewery has used a gas turbine based cogeneration plant to supply steam and electric power requirements Fired with natural gas with a thermal efficiency of 80 the 6 2 million plant produces power with a 90 reduction in greenhouse gas emissions compared to a separate electricity generation and steam production plant The plant is operated by AGL Energy and is rated at 4 4 MW Generation above the brewery s electrical load of 1 2 MW is fed back into the grid 17 2005 Lion Nathan takeover bid edit In late 2005 Lion Nathan made an unsolicited takeover bid for Coopers which was strongly opposed by the board and by the Cooper family It was ultimately rejected at an Extraordinary General Meeting when the holders of 93 4 of the shares voted in favour of permanently removing the 3rd tier purchasing rights of Lion Nathan effectively preventing any current or future takeover bid 18 19 20 21 Prince Alfred College held 70 000 shares 5 in Coopers Brewery which had been received in a bequest At the time of the unsolicited takeover bid by Lion Nathan these shares were valued at between 18 million and 22 million and considered to be a possible blocking stake 22 Liquidity of shares edit Due to various restrictions imposed by the company s constitution the selling of Coopers shares is a tedious and complicated exercise The constitution restricts and defines who can buy shares Shares may not be owned by competitors there are Tiers of rights to buy shares and the constitution also imposes other terms and conditions A further complication is that although all shares have the same voting rights on the floor of a general meeting the four classes of shares have different rights to nominate directors The process of selling involves several steps A seller declares to the board that they wish to sell x shares of class y The first tier rights of purchase are to existing shareholders If there are no first tier buyers The second tier rights of purchase are to the Coopers employees superannuation fund From 1962 to 1995 the third tier rights of purchase were to SA Brewing From 1995 to 2005 the third tier rights of purchase were to Lion Nathan At an Extraordinary General Meeting in 2005 the third tier rights were removed from the constitution The price of the shares is determined by an independent valuation i e NOT by negotiation between seller and buyer A significant issue of the takeover bid was that the offer was five times the last price determined by an independent valuation As a result of the Lion Nathan saga the company has improved the liquidity of shares by offering regular buy backs Prior to the takeover offer there were 117 shareholders of 1 353 358 shares By the end of 2010 the number of shares on issue had reduced by about 20 to 1 15 million held by 129 shareholders 23 2011 Largest Australian owned brewery edit With Lion Nathan wholly owned by Kirin Brewing Company since 2009 and Fosters owned by SABMiller since 2011 Coopers is the only wholly Australian owned major brewery 2 2012 150th anniversary edit Coopers released a limited edition Celebration Ale to celebrate the 150th anniversary as well as celebratory labels on their other beers 2017 Bible Society same sex marriage issue edit On 9 March 2017 Coopers Brewery launched a limited edition premium beer in both can and carton to commemorate the bicentenary of the Bible Society 24 25 Public outcry arose over the use of the Coopers Brewery branded beer in a video 26 of the Bible Society debate over the issue of same sex marriage 27 28 29 Coopers Brewery issued two statements on 12 March 2017 in response to the backlash 30 31 and also posted a tweet saying they were not trying to push a religious message 32 Various venues in Melbourne and Sydney subsequently announced they would no longer be stocking Coopers beers 33 34 On 14 March Coopers issued a further statement 35 36 and accompanying video 37 declaring they were cancelling the release of the Bible Society commemorative cans and joining Australian Marriage Equality On 15 March the Bible Society replaced the original video of the debate between Federal MPs Tim Wilson and Andrew Hastie with a four second clip advising We have decided to remove this video Thank you for your understanding Beers edit nbsp Beers at the Earl nbsp Part of Regency Pk brewery Coopers beers are widely available on tap in South Australia Victoria and New South Wales and in some bars in the rest of Australia as speciality beers They are widely available in bottles and to a lesser extent cans around Australia and New Zealand and occasionally at specialist importers in other countries The distribution of the beers outside of South Australia has been largely promoted since 2003 by the subsidiary Premium Beverages Pty Ltd Coopers bottled beers are characterised by their secondary fermentation technique some yeast remains in the bottle after bottling thus the bottled beer contains some sediment There are three schools of thought with regard to the sediment some drinkers like to mix the sediment throughout the beer by tipping or rolling the beer before drinking while others prefer to decant the beer into a glass leaving most of the sediment at the base of the bottle Coopers have made such choice a strong element in their marketing strategy Some find that mixing the sediment results in a shaken beer and prefer not to mix the sediment at all simply opening the bottle and drinking The action of drinking from the bottle serves to distribute the sediment anyway without shaking one s beer up Coopers also produce a large range of homebrew kits Among these are English Bitter Dark Ale Real Ale and Lager as well as several others Coopers homebrew kits provide the starting place for many new homebrewers across the world and are a highly successful brand Current Coopers Beers 38 39 Beer ABV Available Label colour Details Tap Bottle Can Australian lager 4 2 Y Y Y Turquoise An Australian lager Sparkling Ale 5 8 Y Y Y Red An English style golden ale It has a distinctive cloudy appearance due to the sediment being left in the bottle The Sparkling Ale has a slightly different flavour and higher alcoholic content than the Pale Ale Pale Ale 4 5 Y Y Y Green A pale ale Best Extra Stout 6 3 Y Y Yellow A stout Dark Ale 4 5 Y Y Brown A dark ale which in other parts of the world is called a brown ale Mild Ale 3 5 Y Y Y Orange A Midstrength Ale Coopers entry into the lager dominated mid strength market Premium Light 2 9 Y Y Y Blue A low alcohol beer by Australian standards In Australia any beer with less than 3 alcohol is called light Pacific Pale Ale 4 2 Y Y Y Blue A blonde ale labelled as Session Ale until 2020 Extra Pale Ale XPA 5 2 Y Y Purple A more crispier fruiter flavoured Pale Ale Hazy IPA 6 2 Y Y Pink Limited edition seasonal IPA Ultra Light Birell 0 5 Y Y White A non alcoholic lager style beer Dry 4 2 Y Y White A low carb fine filtered lager style beer nbsp Part of the Coopers range of beers Clear 62 Pilsner Premium Lager Mild Ale Dr Tim s Traditional Ale Pale Ale Sparkling Ale Dark Ale Best Extra Stout Extra Strong Vintage Ale Previous Coopers Beers discontinued renamed seasonal limited edition replaced Beer ABV Available Label Colour Details From To Light Dinner Ale Light Green A pre cursor of Pale Ale Light Brew Sparkling Ale Light Brown A pre cursor of Pale Ale Scotch Ale Broken Hill Real Ale A bitter Family Secrets Amber Ale 5 2 A limited seasonal release red ale Brew A 6 0 A limited seasonal release IPA Vintage Ale 7 5 2019 2020 A limited seasonal release traditional Ale Each release is year named LC Light Ale Special Old Stout 6 8 Heritage 5 2 Adelaide Bitter Adelaide Lager Black Crow 3 6 A mild ale Clear Ale Premium Ale 4 9 Thomas Coopers Finest Export Ale 4 9 DB 4 4 For Diet Beer a carbohydrate modified beer Regency Light 2 9 Regency Draught 4 9 Big Barrel Lager Gold Crown Lager Premium Lager 4 8 Y Y Green A lager 62 Pilsner 5 0 Y Y Black 40 A pilsner Clear 4 5 Y Y Gold A full strength low carbohydrate dry beer Extra Strong Vintage Ale 7 5 Y Y Cream An English strong ale also known as real ale Seasonal limited edition Dr Tim s Traditional Ale 4 5 Green A pale ale naturally conditioned in an Aluminium Can This was essentially Pale Ale rebranded to overcome any comments about differences in taste due to the can Eventually the product was named consistently with bottle and keg Pale Ale The company also produces a range of malt extracts and concentrate for homebrewers Pale Ale edit In the twenty first century Pale Ale is Coopers most heavily marketed most recognised and most successful beer citation needed Although it has only been produced under this name since 1989 it did have a number of similar predecessors from which it can claim a pedigree with names including Light Brew Sparkling Ale brewed in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century before being discontinued due to poor sales and Light Dinner Ale brewed from the 1960s with some changes to the recipe The beer occupies a unique place in the local market it is seen as being somewhere between a craft beer and the traditional mass produced lagers citation needed Distribution edit Coopers distributes Carlsberg Kronenbourg Mythos and Sapporo in Australia 41 42 43 In 2022 it was announced that Coopers had been awarded the brewing rights to Miller Genuine Draft in Australia which includes Miller Chill Lime and Blood Orange flavours Distribution rights for the Miller range were awarded to Perth based Good Drinks Australia In addition the partnership secured the licensed brewing rights to Coors Light 44 The Cooper Family editTo date six generations of the family have been involved in the brewery 45 In addition to those who served as partners and or directors many other family members have worked in the brewery Thomas married twice leading to two branches of the family known as the A side and B side of the family This has led to the company having multiple classes of shares with different voting rights 46 Generations 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Thomas married Ann Laycock Brown 1827 1872 at Skipton in 1849 resulting in 11 children 2 William 1850 1882 3 children Worked in the brewery prior to illness and early death aged 32 Pre deceased Thomas and hence was not mentioned in Thomas s will 46 3 Will William John 1876 1966 Worked in the brewery but was not mentioned in Thomas s will 46 A1 2 John Thomas 1857 1935 9 children Partner 1897 1923 Chairman 1923 1935 A1 3 Francis Thomas 1885 1944 4 children Director 1935 1938 Chairman 1938 1944 A1 4 Geoff Geoffrey Day Thomas 1912 married Jessie McAndrew 1 child Director 1945 1969 Chairman 1969 1990 47 A1 5 Dr James McAndrew 1954 2 children Director since 1990 48 3 John Cecil Gunner 1887 1951 Worked in the brewery A2 3 Andrew Ashgar 1891 1960 3 children Director 1935 1959 A2 4 Ken Kenneth Andrew 1916 2 children Director 1959 1988 A2 5 Glenn Andrew 1950 2 children Director 1988 2002 Chairman since 2002 6 Rachel Ann 1980 First of the sixth generation employed by the brewery 45 7 Annabel May 2010 First born of the seventh generation 49 2 Christopher 1859 1910 7 children Partner 1897 1910 Died before incorporation None of his children worked in the brewery 46 C 2 Samuel 1871 1921 4 children Partner 1897 1921 Both he and his wife died in the few years before incorporation At incorporation their estate was allotted a substantial number of what are now called C class shares None of their children worked in the brewery 46 Thomas married Sarah Louisa Perry 1842 1928 at Adelaide in 1874 resulting in 8 children B1 2 Stanley Reasey 1875 1938 5 children Partner 1897 1923 Director 1923 1935 Chairman 1935 1938 B1 3 Thomas Edwards 1899 1974 2 children Director 1935 1944 Chairman 1944 1969 4 Bob Stanley Robert 1930 1956 Worked in the brewery Died aged 26 B1 4 Bill William Thomas 1932 4 children Director 1969 1977 Managing Director 1977 2002 B2 5 Dr Tim Timothy James 1956 3 children Director 1997 2002 managing director since 2002 B1 5 Melanie Ann 1961 Director since 2009 First female member of the Cooper s board 45 50 5 Matthew Simon 1963 Has worked in the brewery since the 1990s 46 B2 3 Raymond Stanley 1904 1987 2 children Director 1938 1969 B2 1969 1995 D 1995 2002 51 52 4 Max Maxwell 1928 2010 3 children 8 grandchildren Director 1969 1990 Chairman 1990 2002 53 D 5 Robyn 1958 married Cameron Pearce Cam has been a Director since 2002 and has worked in the brewery since 2010 54 5 Nick Nicholas Keith 1960 2 children Worked in partially owned subsidiary Adelaide Malting Co 1987 1998 and in the brewery from 1998 to 1999 46 55 3 Phyliss Mary 1910 Worked in the brewery 2 Frederic 1878 1952 never married Spent all of his working life at the brewery 2 Charles Edward 1881 1936 4 children Worked in the brewery for many years 2 Walter Astley 1882 1909 Worked in the brewery for several years Died aged 26 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Thomas Cooper edit Thomas Cooper 17 December 1826 30 December 1897 was born in Carleton North Yorkshire the youngest of 12 children of Christopher and Sarah nee Booth His parents died when he was young Sarah in 1830 and Christopher in 1832 and he was raised by his sister Ann Thomas was apprenticed to a shoe maker and by the late 1840s six of the seven living children had moved to Skipton John a shuttlemaker lived in Bradford Jane and Mary married Ann was a housekeeper Elizabeth and Martha were domestic servants 56 In 1849 he married Ann Laycock Brown 1827 1872 in the Wesleyan Chapel in Skipton Their first child William 1850 1882 was born in 1850 and Sarah Ann 1851 1852 in 1851 In 1852 Thomas the pregnant Ann and their two children emigrated to South Australia setting sail from Plymouth on the SS Omega on 29 May 1852 During the 86 day voyage Sarah Ann was one of the six children who died but their third child was born as they rounded the Cape of Good Hope and was named Sarah Ann 1852 1854 in memory of her sister The family arrived in Port Adelaide on 24 August 1852 Their first home was a rented two room cottage near the Rising Sun Inn on Bridge Street in the then village of Kensington about three miles east of the city 57 In the ten years before he commenced brewing in Norwood Thomas worked initially as a shoemaker then as a mason and then as a dairyman while Ann bore four more children Mary Ann 1855 1856 John Thomas 1857 1935 Christopher 1859 1910 and Annie Elizabeth 1861 1921 In 1856 he purchased land in George Street Norwood and using his new skills as a mason built a house which he described to his brother as having 6 rooms amp Cellar amp Passage and 12 ft ceilings on acct of Sumr heat 58 In the same letter and many others he urged his brother and family to join him in South Australia but this never eventuated 59 On 13 May 1862 Thomas brewed his first recorded batch He did all the work himself purchasing calling for orders brewing washing filling corking and wiring the bottles delivering the finished product possibly with the help of then 12 year old son William while continuing to attend the cows run the dairy and do the daily milk deliveries Being unlicensed in early June he sought professional advice on the sale of beer from a solicitor which his ledger records as having cost 7s 6d Towards the end of 1862 Thomas realised that to make a living as a brewer he would need to increase his brewing capacity so he mortgaged his property to Frederick Scarfe the Mayor of Norwood a butcher and a customer of Thomas s ale for 300 and built a new brewhouse In January 1863 he sold his cows and the milk delivery run Although with half a dozen breweries in Adelaide there was a lot of competition Thomas s ale was unique in that he used no sugar consequently ours being pure the Doctors recommend it to their patients 60 Although one of the smaller South Australian brewers Thomas gained a reputation for quality By 1867 he had over 120 customers some quite notable e g Samuel Davenport John Barton Hack George Hawker Dr Penfold and the Lord Bishop of Adelaide but he did not supply public houses apparently because it was against his principles 61 Ann bore four more children before dying suddenly in 1872 Joseph Brown 1863 1888 Jane Amelia 1865 1943 Margaret Alice 1868 1869 and Samuel 1871 1921 She was survived by all five of her sons and two of her six daughters 46 Thomas remarried in 1874 and Sarah Louisa Perry bore eight children Stanley Reasey 1875 1938 Thomas Perry 1876 1876 Francis Scowby 1877 1878 Frederic 1878 1952 Edward Booth 1880 1881 Charles Edward 1881 1936 Lily Louise 1881 1893 and Walter Astley 1882 1909 46 When he died in 1897 Thomas was survived by his wife and nine of his nineteen children seven of his sons and two of his daughters 46 Tim Cooper edit Dr Tim Cooper AM 62 MBBS MD MSc MBA MRCP UK the brewery s Managing Director and Chief Brewer is a fifth generation family member from the B side of the family Tim entered the family business in 1990 after training as a medical doctor and surgeon At the University of Adelaide he was reprimanded by the Vice Chancellor for his role in rigging the vote that secured the election of Nick Xenophon as editor of On Dit in 1976 63 He gained qualifications in medicine MBBS Adelaide MD Bristol before acquiring qualifications in brewing science MSc Birmingham and business administration MBA Adelaide Tim was responsible for and was the driving force behind the design and construction of the new brewery development at Regency Park In 2004 the company introduced the world s clarification needed first naturally conditioned beer in an aluminum can Dr Tim s Traditional Ale which was named after him 64 Glenn Cooper edit Glenn Cooper AM 65 is chairman of the company and a fifth generation family member from the A side of the family He is a third half cousin of Tim Glenn entered the business in 1990 having previously worked in IT and marketing roles for both Anderson Digital Equipment and his own Adelaide based business Glenn is credited with the highly successful marketing campaign which has increased the market share of Cooper s beers from well below to well above that of historical South Australian market leader West End 64 Company structure editCooper amp Sons 1862 1897 edit Thomas started recording his brews in 1862 and by the late 1860s he was employing one man and his teenage son William After initial success and expansion in the late 1860s Thomas had many problems with the quality of the brews and the business did not fare well for the next decade In 1870 he sold all his property to meet his debts and moved to rented premises in High Street Kensington By 1877 Thomas had resolved many of the quality problems and in 1878 sales were back up to the level of the good years of the 1860s In 1878 second son John went to work in the brewery full time 66 Although Thomas continued to refuse to sell to public houses and the licensing laws required his minimum sale to be five gallons his customer base continued to expand and on 23 July 1881 the first ale was brewed at the much larger newly purchased and built premises in Statenborough Street Leabrook Although eldest son William died in 1882 aged 32 by this time second and third sons Thomas and Christopher were working in the brewery and fourth son Joseph joined them when he finished his schooling Under John s influence and monitoring there was greater uniformity of the materials used and the quality of the products steadily improved In 1882 production increased to 30 000 gallons and in the mid 1880s 48 000 gallons with the brewery employing seven men The South Australian economic depression of the 1880s and 1890s suppressed demand and for the next 10 years production was level at around 30 000 gallons per year Thomas retired from general work in the early 1890s with John running the business with Christopher Joseph died in 1888 aged 25 Fifth son Samuel and sixth son Stanley the eldest of second wife Sarah s children came to the brewery when they finished school as did William s son Will and younger sons Frederic Charles and Walter 67 Thos Cooper amp Sons Partnership 1897 1923 edit Thomas died on 30 December 1897 After bequests to his wife daughters and youngest sons his will left all of his property to his four eldest surviving sons John Christopher Samuel and Stanley under instructions to carry on my business as Brewers under the form of Thos Cooper amp Sons as partners Younger sons Frederic who spent all of his working life at the brewery and Charles who worked at the brewery for many years received no interest in the business Nor did grandson Will who also worked at the brewery Youngest son Walter was bequeathed an interest in the business when he reached age 25 but died of malaria aged 26 68 Cooper amp Sons Ltd 1923 1988 edit Each time one of the partners retired or died a new partnership agreement needed to be drawn up This became unwieldy so in 1923 the partners decided to incorporate with limited liability An agreement was drawn up where the capital of the company was declared as 39 000 and the 39 000 1 shares were distributed John Thomas Cooper 15 953 shares 41 A Executors of Samuel s widow s estate on direction of J T Cooper 7 092 shares 18 C 69 Stanley Reasey Cooper 15 953 shares 41 B Francis Thomas Cooper 1 share C 69 Wilfred Frank Cooper 1 share C 69 Directors were to be appointed equally by holders of A and B shares 5 In 1962 when the two remaining Adelaide brewers were fearing takeover SA Brewing and Coopers did a share swap This gave SA Brewing a 25 interest in Coopers C and D class shares and Coopers received 291 404 SA Brewing shares 2 65 The Coopers board of directors was increased from four to five with SA Brewing s D shares having the right to elect the fifth director At the time a total of 486 750 new shares were issued being made up of 87 751 D class shares and the remainder along with other unclassified shares becoming C class shares 6 After discussions with and receiving support from SA Brewing Coopers sold their SA Brewing shares in 1984 at a substantial profit 7 Directors edit The directors of Cooper amp Sons Ltd were Chairman Family board members Other board members seats Managing director 1923 J T Cooper A S R Cooper B 2 1935 S R Cooper B F T Cooper A T E Cooper B A A Cooper A 4 1938 F T Cooper A T E Cooper B A A Cooper A R S Cooper B 1944 T E Cooper B A A Cooper A R S Cooper B vacant A 1945 A A Cooper A R S Cooper B G D T Cooper A 1959 R S Cooper B G D T Cooper A K A Cooper A Fifth seat created 1962 1962 Sir Roland Jacobs SA Brewing D 70 5 1967 Sir Norman Young SA Brewing D 71 1969 Geoff Cooper A Ken Cooper A Max Cooper B Bill Cooper B Geoff Cooper 1977 Bill Cooper 1983 J I N Winter SA Brewing D Coopers Brewery Ltd since 1988 edit With Melanie joining the company in 1985 and subsequently becoming Company Secretary and a Director the name Cooper amp Sons was no longer appropriate She lobbied for a change in the company s name and was eventually successful SA Brewing was acquired by trans Tasman Lion Nathan in 1993 After two years of negotiations in 1995 Cooper family members purchased all of the D class shares with their right to elect a director and some of the C class shares and Coopers Brewery Ltd purchased the remainder of the C class shares held by SA Brewing In return the Coopers constitution was amended to give Lion Nathan third tier rights to buy Coopers shares This resulted in Max and Bill owning more than 50 of the D class shares They agreed that Bill would sell Max his D class shares and Max would sell Bill his B class shares resulting in Max owning the majority of the D s and Bill owning the majority of the B s 13 In 2005 Lion Nathan launched a hostile takeover of Coopers offering to buy Coopers shares at five times the price at which they had last traded Although the 1995 negotiations resulted in Lion Nathan owning no Coopers shares the section of the Coopers constitution which stated the circumstances under which shares could be sold appeared to give Lion Nathan the avenue to buy Coopers shares The constitution stated three tiers of purchasing rights The shares must first be offered to an existing shareholder first rights agreement If existing shareholders choose not to buy the shares must then be offered to the Coopers Superannuation Fund second rights agreement If the Fund chooses not to buy the shares must then be offered to Lion Nathan third rights agreement Lots of legal activity injunctions claims and counter claims followed Eventually the Coopers Board gained a ruling that allowed them to call an Extraordinary General Meeting to decide a motion which would remove the third rights agreement from the constitution At the meeting the holders of 93 4 of the shares voted to remove the third rights agreement from the constitution 21 At the time November 2005 Coopers had 117 Shareholders and 4 classes of shares 52 The Coopers Constitution and the 2005 Buy Back Offer stated a the holders of the 15 553 A Class shares may elect two directors to the board of Coopers A Class directors b the holders of the 15 953 B Class shares may elect two directors to the board of Coopers B Class directors c the holders of the 1 234 761 C Class shares with the holders of Classes A B and D Class shares may elect one director to the board of Coopers if that director is nominated by a unanimous resolution of all directors appointed by the holders of A B and D shares C Class director and d the holders of the 87 091 D Class shares may elect one director to the board of Coopers D Class director The total number of shares of all classes was 1 353 358 If the Buy Back was fully subscribed 203 003 shares would be cancelled and the total number of shares would be reduced to 1 150 335 72 The Takeovers Panel stated that the directors holdings were 52 Glenn and James or interests closely associated with them controlled 4 834 A Class shares or approximately 31 of the A Class shares Bill or interests closely associated with him controlled 9 456 B Class shares or approximately 59 of the B Class shares M Cooper Nominees Pty Ltd a company associated with Max controlled 49 271 D Class shares or approximately 57 of the D Class shares The other Coopers directors or persons closely associated with them owned 10 420 or approximately 11 7 of the D Class shares The Coopers directors voting power was 28 2 73 In the chairman s address to the 2006 AGM Glenn noted that the costs incurred by Coopers in addressing the offer were 8 million 74 In 2009 Coopers Brewery Ltd appointed its first female director Directors edit The directors of Coopers Brewery Ltd have been Chairman Family Board members Other board members Seats ManagingDirector A B D 1988 Geoff A Glenn Max amp Bill J I N Winter SA Brewing D 5 Bill 1990 Max B Glenn amp James Bill 1995 Max D 75 Bill amp N C Shierlaw 75 1995 Fifth seatin family control C 1996 Sixth seat 1996 2006 D R Kingston Rothschild C 76 6 1997 Bill amp Tim 75 D 2002 Glenn A James Bill amp Tim Cameron Pearce 54 Tim 2007 No external directors 5 2009 Tim amp Melanie 75 2010 Cam Pearce now executive chairman directorSee also edit nbsp Beer portal nbsp South Australia portal nbsp Companies portal Australian pub Beer in Australia List of breweries in Australia South Australian food and drinkReferences editNotes edit a b Hampson Tim 2008 The Beer Book London Dorling Kindersley p 10 ISBN 978 1405333016 a b Coopers to become Australia s largest brewer Cooper s press releases 22 September 2011 Archived from the original on 3 February 2014 pdf Archived 25 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine 1 Coopers Annual Report 2020 Painter 1998 p 43 a b Painter 1998 p 65 a b Painter 1998 p 106 a b Painter 1998 p 128 Painter 1998 p 114 Alison Painter Professional Historians Association SA Alison Painter 1992 Adelaide Hotels and Temperance 1860 1930 Professional Historians Association SA Painter 1998 pp 114 115 117 a b Alison Painter 1987 Jolly Good Ale and Old The History of Coopers Brewery 1862 1987 published to commemorate 125 years of brewing by the Cooper family in South Australia Alison Painter 1998 Jolly Good Ale and Old The History of Coopers Brewery 1862 1998 ISBN 0 9586067 0 6A further updated third edition is due to be published soon 13 May 2012 is the 150th anniversary of Thomas s first recorded brew a b Painter 1998 p 156 Evans Simon 30 September 2016 How Coopers brewery had power on tap when rest of SA blacked out Australian Financial Review Retrieved 29 June 2018 Coopers Brewery Cogeneration Facility PDF AGL Energy Retrieved 29 June 2018 Coopers Brewery SA Memory samemory sa gov au Archived from the original on 24 February 2011 Retrieved 21 July 2010 Government of Western Australia Office of Energy Case Study Coopers Brewery Cogeneration Project PDF clean energy wa gov au Retrieved 21 July 2010 dead link Coopers shareholders stymie Lion Nathan bid The Age theage com au 14 December 2005 Retrieved 21 July 2010 Trevor Chappell 2 September 2005 Lion Nathan bids for Coopers The Sydney Morning Herald smh com au Retrieved 21 July 2010 John P G Lessing and Renaee Johns July 2006 Resisting a hostile takeover the Lion Nathan bid for Coopers Brewery ePublications bond epublications bond edu au Archived from the original on 21 July 2008 Retrieved 21 July 2010 a b Verity Edwards 2005 Woman controls brewery s destiny The Australian 1 October 2005 dead link Copy available at homebrewandbeer com Kohler Alan 20 November 2005 Use surplus to fund tax cuts Now The Age Retrieved 21 April 2018 Blair Speedy 2010 Coopers Brewery keeps a cool head on global suitors The Australian 28 December 2010 Coopers launches Bible Society beer Brews News 9 March 2017 Retrieved 13 March 2017 A good drop for the Good Book Bible Society 9 March 2017 Archived from the original on 13 March 2017 Retrieved 13 March 2017 Keep it light Bible Society 9 March 2017 Archived from the original on 14 March 2017 Retrieved 14 March 2017 Keep It Light Bible Society 9 March 2017 Archived from the original on 12 March 2017 Retrieved 12 March 2017 Liberal MPs in marriage equality debate sponsored by Coopers beer Bible Society The Age 11 March 2017 Retrieved 12 March 2017 Beer and Bibles brewery cops same sex marriage backlash Australian Broadcasting Corporation Triple J 12 March 2017 Retrieved 12 March 2017 Coopers Keeping It Light PDF 12 March 2017 Retrieved 12 March 2017 Commemorative Premium Lite PDF 12 March 2017 Retrieved 13 March 2017 coopersbrewery 12 March 2017 please know we aren t trying to push a religious message See our full statement here Tweet via Twitter Music Venues Boycott Coopers Over Same Sex Marriage Video Music Feeds 13 March 2017 Retrieved 13 March 2017 Pubs boycott Coopers beer following Bible Society marriage equality marketing campaign The Sydney Morning Herald 14 March 2017 Retrieved 14 March 2017 COOPERS BREWERY SUPPORTS DIVERSITY AND EQUALITY Coopers Brewery 14 March 2017 Retrieved 14 March 2017 Coopers Brewery supports diversity and equality PDF Coopers Brewery 14 March 2017 Retrieved 14 March 2017 Coopers Brewery supports diversity and equality Coopers Brewery 14 March 2017 Archived from the original on 21 December 2021 Retrieved 14 March 2017 Coopers Brewery Pale Ale Sparkling Ale Premium Beers and Stouts Archived 9 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine Our Beer Coopers Brewery 22 February 2021 Retrieved 22 February 2021 The 62 Pilsner label appears only on the neck of the bottle Coopers claims Carlsberg crown from Foster s The Australian Retrieved 17 November 2021 Greenblat Eli 19 July 2011 Coopers to brew Sapporo beer for local markets The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 17 November 2021 Mythos Greece s biggest export beer hits Australian shores Ausfoodnews com au 5 August 2010 Retrieved 17 November 2021 Spence Andrew 25 May 2022 Coopers to brew major US beers in Adelaide a b c Coopers now operating for six generations Australian Brews News 17 November 2009 a b c d e f g h i j Painter 1998 inside front cover GDT Cooper MBE 1 January 1941 itsanhonour gov auSX1435 Lieutenant Colonel Geoffrey Day Thomas Cooper MBE 2 3 www awm gov au WWII Service Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback MachineBiographical cuttings on G D T Geoff Cooper catalogue nla gov au James McAndrew Cooper 1982 Host bacteria relationships at the secretory surfaces of the lung PhD Thesis University of Adelaide Brewery celebrates seventh generation Cooper permanent dead link 8 July 2010 Press release www coopers com au Meredith Booth 2009 Melanie Cooper the baroness of beer The Advertiser 21 October 2009 In 1995 Cooper family members purchased all of the D class shares from Lion Nathan This resulted in Max and Bill owning more than 50 of the D class shares They agreed that Bill would sell Max his D class shares and Max would sell Bill his B class shares resulting in Max owning the majority of the D s with the right to nominate the D Class director and Bill owning the majority of the B s with the right to nominate the two B Class directors a b c ATP 22 2005 Takeovers Panel www takeovers gov au Meredith Booth 2010 Coopers Brewery ex chairman Maxwell Cooper dies The Advertiser 1 December 2010 a b Cameron Pearce the husband of one of Max s daughters became a director on 31 January 2002 when Max retired from the board REJECT the Lion Nathan Offer p 104 He subsequently joined the brewery as Director Business Development in September 2010 after nearly 10 years as CEO of Meals on Wheels SA Inc and 21 years with the Shell Company of Australia Ltd New appointments at Coopers permanent dead link 25 November 2010 Press release www coopers com au Cam Pearce at Linkedin small photo permanent dead link Painter 1998 pp 159 amp 164 Painter 1998 pp 1 3 Painter 1998 pp 3 4 Letter from Thomas Cooper to his brother John written in 1857 Painter 1998 pp 4 8 Letter from Thomas Cooper to his brother John written in 1864 Painter 1998 pp 9 17 Timothy James Cooper AM 9 June 2008 Citation For service to the brewing industry particularly through the implementation of environmentally sustainable production and manufacturing practices to professional organisations and to the community Subscribe to The Australian Dsf newscorpaustralia com Retrieved 17 November 2021 a b Tim amp Glenn Cooper Cooper s website Archived from the original on 8 January 2016 Retrieved 15 February 2012 Glenn Andrew Cooper AM Member of the Order of Australia 13 June 2005 Citation For service to the food and beverage industry and to the community through support for cultural charitable and sporting organisations Centenary Medal 1 January 2001 Citation For long service to excellence in brewing Painter 1998 pp 9 26 Painter 1998 pp 27 42 Painter 1998 pp 43 44 a b c Initially these shares had no classification but with the SA Brewing share swap of 1962 they were designated C class to distinguish them from the D class shares which had the right to nominate the D Class director At that time and before these shares had no rights to nominate a director as subsequently described in the 2005 takeover documents Alison Painter 2007 Jacobs Sir Roland Ellis 1891 1981 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 17 MUP Norman Young 1991 Figuratively speaking the reminiscences experiences amp observations of Sir Norman Young catalogue nla gov au Buy Back offer permanent dead link December 2005 2005 Buy Back offer permanent dead link p 18 Chairman s address permanent dead link to the Coopers AGM 30 November 2006 a b c d After Max and Bill did their B Class amp D Class share trade in 1995 Max controlled the election of the D Class director and Bill controlled the election of the two B Class directors To fill the second B class director position Bill elected Norman Sheirlaw Norman is a cousin of Bill s and a long term friend He had been a successful stockbroker investor and director of numerous companies Painter 1998 p 167 Mr Poseidon was once a battler The Age 27 January 1970 p 2 Tim gained a seat on the board on 22 October 1997 when Norman Shierlaw resigned Painter 1998 p 167 REJECT the Lion Nathan Offer p 104 One of Max s sons in law Cameron Pearce became the D class director when Max retired from the board in 2002 Melanie became a director when Bill retired from the board in 2009 Max died in November 2010 it is not clear who now controls the D Class shares Fleur Leyden 2007 Southern Cross hires its own Herald Sun 20 February 2007David Kingston s decision to step down as a Board member was announced in the Chairman s address permanent dead link at the AGM 30 November 2006 thus returning the board to five directors Bibliography edit Deutsher Keith M 2012 The Breweries of Australia 2nd ed Glebe NSW Beer amp Brewer Media ISBN 9780987395214 External links editOfficial website Tim Cooper interview 34 52 21 S 138 34 23 E 34 8726 S 138 5731 E 34 8726 138 5731 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coopers Brewery amp oldid 1221451427 Tim Cooper, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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